Skip to content

The Next Storm/Next Snow Forecast Discussion from the Cherrywood Observatory – October 8, 2017

This content was originally published by the Longmont Observer and is licensed under a Creative Commons license.

Forecast Discussion:

I'm stuck in an area with poor data flow today, so I'll describe more than show.

First, the National Weather Service has issued a Winter Storm Watch for the I-25 corridor. I'll reproduce the text here (I don't modify NWS watches or warnings - but will add my opinion afterwards, if I feel I need to).

Heavy snow possible. Plan on possible hazardous travel

conditions, including the morning commute on Monday. Total

snow accumulations of 4 to 6 inches are possible.

* Where... Fort Collins, Boulder, Denver, and Castle Rock.

* When... from late Sunday night through Monday afternoon.

* Additional details... scattered power outages may occur due to

heavy wet snow accumulating on trees still bearing their

leaves.

Figure 1 shows the snowfall potential according to the GFS, Longmont gets 3-4".  Figure 2 shows the WPC guidance and it has Longmont (estimated differently statistically) has us at 2.5" or so (it is kinda hard to read even at the state scale). There will be a lot of melting, but cool surfaces will build up snow (hence the tree damage warning above).  I'm still putting us in the 1-4" range.  The mountains to our west will pick up 10" or more in places.

I'm sticking with the main cold front passage around 7pm Sunday with 45mph wind gusts.  Rain chances start around 9pm and the change over to snow around midnight Sunday/Monday. It does look like the main part of the storm will be past late Monday morning, but some snow chances continue into the afternoon Monday.

Lows Monday night/Tuesday morning now appear to drop all the way to around 20F.  You must prepare your pipes and yard for this kind of cold.  This will probably be as significant or more significant than the snow itself.

Figure 3 (Not in the Longer Range) is the Saturday afternoon NHC forecast for Hurricane Nate. It looks like it hit just east of New Orleans as a category 2 storm.  The worse weather with this storm should be on the east side, so it could have been worse for New Orleans.

Figure 1: GFS total snow accumulation guidance through Wed morning (far beyond the storm).

Figure 2: WPC model guidance snowfall total (to 5% most confident) through Wed AM (far beyond the storm)

Figure 3:NHC 5 day forecast for Nate - about to make landfall Sat PM.

There is nothing in the longer range - there is plenty of excitement for all this weekend. Any my internet out here is slow!

Current Weather

Cloudy

Cloudy

40°F

UV Index
1 Low
Pressure
30.24 Steady
Visibility
7 miles
Dewpoint
35 °F
Humidity
82%
Wind
NNE 5 mph
Gust
9.2 mph
Wind Chill
36 °F

Hourly Forecast

Today
3 PM
41°F
Showers
Today
4 PM
42°F
Showers
Today
5 PM
40°F
Cloudy
Today
6 PM
39°F
Rain
Today
7 PM
38°F
Rain
Today
8 PM
37°F
Cloudy
Today
9 PM
35°F
Flurries
Today
10 PM
35°F
Cloudy
Today
11 PM
35°F
Rain and snow
Tomorrow
12 AM
35°F
Rain and snow
Tomorrow
1 AM
34°F
Cloudy
Tomorrow
2 AM
34°F
Snow

7 Day Forecast

Rain and snow

Friday

42 °F

Chilly; rain and snow showers this morning with little or no accumulation followed by rain and drizzle this afternoon


Rain and snow

Friday Night

32 °F

Periods of snow; rain mixed in early, accumulating 1-3 inches; roads could be slippery


Flurries

Saturday

39 °F

A bit of morning snow with little or no accumulation; otherwise, cloudy and chilly; storm total snowfall 1-3 inches


Intermittent clouds

Saturday Night

31 °F

A shower in places in the evening; otherwise, partly cloudy


Partly sunny

Sunday

64 °F

Partly sunny, pleasant and warmer


Mostly clear

Sunday Night

41 °F

Mainly clear


Intermittent clouds

Monday

79 °F

Warmer with a blend of sun and clouds


Partly cloudy

Monday Night

36 °F

Partly cloudy


Mostly cloudy

Tuesday

64 °F

Mostly cloudy and cooler


Mostly cloudy

Tuesday Night

40 °F

Mostly cloudy


Sunrise and Sunset

Sunrise
6:15 AM
Sunset
7:44 PM

Based on AccuWeather data